News and updates from the author of the new book "NAILED: ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed At All"

Sunday, January 09, 2011

Response to Dr. James McGrath

As many of you already know, this past November I was a speaker at Skepticon 3 in Springfield, Missouri (and btw, if you can make it to this year's, you won't regret it - it's an awesome event!). My talk there was well-received, and you can hear it on Youtube here. Dr. James F. McGrath, a New Testament scholar at Butler University in Indianapolis heard it - and really hates it. You can read his post here. In a nutshell, he claims the talk is full of blatant errors and says nothing biblical scholars don't already know. While he does make some reasonable points, for the most part I disagree completely with what he has to say, and you can find my reasons why below. Since my response is too long for the comment field on his blog (and in case these issues are brought up by other critics) I'm posting it here.-DF

Dr. McGrath, I had a chance to read your post this morning and first wanted to thank you for taking the time to review my brief talk at Skepticon; it pleases me there are points you found entertaining. I sincerely appreciate and welcome your corrections and comments, even if they are painful to hear. However I feel the need to respond as there are several points where I disagree with your assessment, and in some places it appears you’re operating under a misapprehension or are simply mistaken.

To begin, though I did preface my talk by apologizing for it being a quick and dirty intro to the subject, it appears one of your chief complaints is that the issues discussed are not sufficiently nuanced, and you are absolutely right; in this 45+ minute talk for a popular audience they certainly are not; as you saw, even this all-too-brief introduction ran out of time, with no time for unpacking every argument of a 245 page book, let alone discussing the finer points of historical-critical methodology. My new book, NAILED: Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed At All, does discuss them in much greater depth, and also has references to additional scholarly reading for those who desire still deeper examination of the issues. And on the whole, NAILED has received an overwhelmingly positive response both from biblical historians and general readers.

Let me address a few of the items you consider factual errors: You say I get off to a “rough start” in listing a sampling of the more spectacular gospel events that are not corroborated by contemporary historians, though it appears you don’t actually take issue with my point I’m making there: that if any of these Gospel events actually occurred, it would be reasonable to expect mention of them in contemporary sources. You do echo recent criticisms of Bart Ehrman when you imply that I treat these serious problems as “dirty little secrets that scholars are hiding.” As he makes it clear in Jesus, Interrupted, scholars might well know these things, but the news certainly hasn’t percolated to the overwhelming rank and file of the public, believers or nonbelievers alike. Besides, most believers don't read the scholars you have in mind but listen to preachers and apologists and regard them as scholars instead (which is the reason for the conflation in my talk). I certainly know that NT scholars have been aware of these issues for generations, and I often say as much often, if not this particular time. And I certainly don’t make any claims that I’m the first or only commentator to bring them up.

Besides, your complaint that all this is “common knowledge to scholars” seems weirdly irrelevant. My talk is for an audience most of whom indeed don’t know all this, so it makes little sense to carp that I’m only communicating what scholars have already said, or that a talk relaying to the public what scholars say should be derided "because it isn't news." Surely you teach classes on these subjects - do you assume your students already know all these things?

You rightly note that we do not discount the historicity of ancient events simply because miracles are associated with them, and I want to make it clear I don’t discount Jesus’ historicity on any single point alone, let alone any a priori naturalist bias against miracles. I do say that elements on the scale of a mass resurrection of venerated Jewish holy men who emerge from their tombs and wander Jerusalem, appearing to many (Matt. 27: 52-53) can be safely rejected (without taking an “all or nothing” approach) since we have no corroboration from them in sources that discuss much less interesting Judean events during the same time without a word about earthquakes, angels or supernatural darkness.

At the risk of conflating the “Jesus of Faith” with the “Jesus of History,” I wanted to start out by addressing the problems that undermine the traditional image of Jesus, which I think is still important to bring up even though not strictly relevant to the historicity issue.That said, it isn’t just these blatantly mythological elements of the Gospels that are in question. As I discuss in the book, even the most basic elements of Christ’s life are problematic: Not just the dates associated with his life and ministry, but the identity of his disciples, details of his trial and crucifixion, his relationship to John the Baptist, and discrepancies between the evolving Christologies found in pre-Pauline elements (such as the Kenosis Hymn in Philippians 2:8-11) and Paul’s generation of believers and the later Gospels. All these and still other considerations are compounded by the uncontroversial scholarly consensus on the Synoptic problem and Markan Priority.

On top of this, there is the fact, ably demonstrated by numerous historians, including Arnold Ehrhardt, Thomas Brodie, Richard Carrier, Randel Helms, Dennis MacDonald, Jennifer Maclean and more, that Mark’s entire Gospel is a treasure trove of symbolic, rather than historical, meaning. Even the anonymous author of Mark tells us what he is doing right from the outset: he is writing a gospel, not a history or a biography (Mark 1:1). What’s more, he makes it clear that he is passing on the secret, sacred truths of a new mystery faith, the Mystery of the Kingdom of God:

“The Mystery of the Kingdom of God is given to you, but to those who are outside everything is produced in parables, so that when they watch they may see but not know, and when they listen they may hear but not understand, for otherwise they might turn themselves around and be forgiven.”

(Mark 4:11)

I am certainly not the first or only commentator to note that the first century is a particularly well-documented period. There is a wealth of extant writings from first century writers, and some mythicists (particularly John Remsberg) have gone overboard citing plenty of them without regard for motive. I was very careful to not include any who did not have good reason to mention Christ; even so there are many Roman and Jewish writers that meet the criteria. I list them along with the reasons they could have been expected to mention Christ, including Philo of Alexandria. For example, Seneca the Younger’s book On Superstition lambasts every known religion - including Judaism. But strangely, he makes no mention whatsoever of Christ or Christianity. This uncomfortable fact later made Augustine squirm in City of God (6.11) as he struggled to explain away Seneca’s glaring omission.

You rightly note that his older brother, Gallio, never mentions Jesus or Paul. That silence is remarkable, too - compounded by the fact that Gallio appears in Acts (18:12-17) as the magistrate who heard Paul's case and threw it out of court. If this were true, it’s curious that even in Acts, Gallio has never heard of Jesus. This makes no sense at all if Jesus was a recently executed famous miracle worker (let alone one who had returned from the dead and remained in Jerusalem for forty days, as Acts also says).

While I take your point about Justus of Tiberius (and incidentally, I do note in the book that only fragments of his writings survive, and that Photius complained about him in the 9th century) and do appreciate the caveat, I am not so quick to dismiss Photius’ comments entirely based solely on the hypothetical scenario you suggest. For one reason, we know that the early Church Fathers were eager for any trace of historical support for Jesus (even hostile), yet neither such an account from Justus or the Testimonium Flavianum appear in the writings of more than a dozen of these early Christian writers, including Justin Martyr, Theophilus Antiochenus, Melito of Sardis, Minucius Felix, Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Julius Africanus, Pseudo-Justin, Tertullian, Hippolytus, Origen, Methodius and Lactantius. And in any case, he is far from the only historian I cite in the book.

You claim I make several errors re: Josephus’ Testimonium Flavianum and the James Reference. This is another point which would be better served by you reading my book.In fact I spend an entire chapter discussing both of the passages in detail, also citing several historians, including Josephus scholar Michael Hardwick. As I point out, there is no debate that the Testimonium is a forgery; the only issue is over how much of it is a forgery. I give the relevant factors that point to it being a complete, not a partial, interpolation (Agapius’ 10th century Arabic Testimonium, and for that matter, the medieval Syriac Testimonium, notwithstanding), and even why the evidence points to Eusebius of Caesarea as the forger.

And with all respect, it is you who are mistaken about Origen. It is very clear that Origen had never heard of the Testimonium; in response to Celsus asking what miracles Jesus performed, Origen answers that Jesus’ life was indeed full of striking and miraculous events, “but from what other source can we can furnish an answer than from the Gospel narratives?” (ContraCelsum, 2.33) In the same book (in fact, the very same passage you allude to - 1.47), Origen even quotes from Antiquities of the Jews in order to prove the historical existence of John the Baptist, and after adding that Josephus didn’t believe in Jesus, does indeed criticize him for failing to mention Jesus in that book, saying that “he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was the cause of these calamities befalling the people.”And the simple fact that Josephus was a Jew is sufficient to account for the fact that he did not believe in Jesus; it’s unnecessary to go further and posit some veiled reference to the Testimonium.

As I make clear in the book, the phrase tou legomenou Christou in the James reference is quite problematic, and I list several solid reasons why the passage makes no sense if Josephus is talking about the James who was head of the Jerusalem church, but makes perfect sense if he is talking about James, the brother of Jesus, son of Damneus - the Jesus who is actually mentioned in the paragraph. At any rate, this argument is hardly original to me: several prominent scholars have already argued the very same thing, and James Carleton Paget, one of the leading experts on the issue declares it unresolved on present evidence: I refer you to his "Some Observations on Josephus and Christianity," Journal of Theological Studies 52.2 (October 2001): 539-624 (pp. 546-54 treats the scholarship on this passage). Incidentally, as it turns out, it is also incorrect to say Origen provided evidence for the James Reference in the copy of Antiquities he knew (though several scholars besides you also maintain this). Richard Carrier has a paper in submission status proving this point, which I can forward to you if you wish to see it.

You are not quite correct when you say I turn to Colossians for what Paul thought about Jesus; those passages come from several NT writers, not just those of Paul (and/or the DeuteroPaulines, if one accepts them as such).And I strongly disagree that one needs to dismiss significant amounts of evidence to say that Paul’s Christ is not a historical figure. Nor does the suggestion that Paul’s epistles are only occasional writings, or writing to those who already know everything about Jesus explain the curious lapses - or the places where he outright contradicts all the various contradictory Gospel Jesuses, such as when he denies his Jesus performed any miracles (1 Cor. 1:22-23).

The “Silence of Paul” concerning basic aspects of Jesus’ life has long puzzled biblical scholars, and those few curious points where Paul could be interpreted as speaking about an earthly Jesus only make the contradictions between Paul’s Christ and the Gospels’ Jesus of Nazareth stand out - passages like his revelation of the Lord’s Supper and his list of “witnesses” to the risen Christ in 1 Corinthians, his uncharacteristic and anachronistic gloat in 1 Thess. 15-16, and his strange conflicts in Galatians with men we think of as Jesus’ family and disciples (but whom he dismisses as nobodies!) - again, I discuss all these in the book.

If I gave the impression that Gnosticism predates Christianity, I do need to temper that, though in certain parts of the Roman Empire, Gnostic, Marcionite and other forms of early Christian movements were in place before their orthodox counterparts took hold.

But like you, I don’t necessarily believe that Christian Gnosticism was the very earliest form of Christianity; I only discuss them to give a sense of the diverse spectrum of Christian thought in antiquity. Personally, I suspect we may never tease out just how complicated the interplay was between them. (I do find it fascinating to see how the Nag Hammadi’s pagan text Eugnostos theBlessed was preserved in the process of being turned into a Christian text, theSophia of Jesus Christ,hinting at a very intermeshed and long-term relationship with Gnosticism)

Your contention that I (and others) “misuse Midrash" is curious; you seem to be objecting that Jews didn't create new figures from old stories at all, when of course the Talmud is full of midrashic aggadah (e.g. The Book of Tobit). On the other hand, if you’re arguing that the Gospels don’t contain aggadic midrash, then I have to disagree with you, and would refer you to Randel Helms’ Gospel Fictions or Thomas Brodie’s Birthing of the New Testament; cf. Richard Pervo’s Mystery of Acts, which demonstrates that even Acts at times slips into aggadic midrash of the Gospels themselves. (Or are you merely advising that the NT usage is not midrash per se, but should be termed aggadic midrash or midrashic aggadah to distinguish it from halakha midrashim? If so, point granted)

Lastly, the quick and dirty intro talk is just that - all the weightier historical considerations such as various forms of historical criteria, redaction criticism (particularly in the case of the Synoptics, John’s Gospel, and Acts), the state of the manuscript evidence, evolving Christologies, textual analysis, etc. all had to wait for the book. And none of this book was created in a vacuum; As noted in the book, I did research from all across the theological spectrum for years, and the final product has been discussed, debated and peer-reviewed by several historians, both classical and biblical. Though my ultimate conclusion may strike many as radical, much of what I argue is not especially controversial and is accepted general historical consensus. I can’t guarantee that you’ll like the book or its conclusions any better than my talk, but I do hold out hope, and in any case, again, I would sincerely welcome further input from you.

Enjoyed your post. Especially the list of names you provide that will allow me do look some of them up to expand my reading list. I have been studying chrstian history since about 1990, and happened to get off to a good start when I called a local college, and asked for the name of a "bible scholar" that I could contact. They gave me the name of Robert M. Price, whom I contacted, started attending his sunday school, and also started just hanging our his office hours talking to him. He got me off on the right foot in the study of the subject. While we not live in different states, I have continued to study early Christianity. I have evolved from initially being interested in the character of jesus, to looking for info on him from the gospels, then later started to think that there is virtually no historical information there, and began to start to look for historical info in the area of patristics.

I have found things slow going because even what appears to be the academic community seems to take a great deal of church traditions and dogma as a given are it seems that almost everything is undemonstratable speculation rather than anything that we have emperical evidence on.

But I do enjoy the study of the subject, and feel that I have a better idea of how the early church stated than when I began studying the subject. And I find the topic, while dissapointing in the lack of new discoveries, is fun.

Dr. McGrath, thanks again for your thoughtful response. I knew anybody who whomps on creationists and likes all the same movies I do couldn't be all bad! I've just posted a follow-up post. Thanks again.All the best,-Dave Fitzgerald

Rick, Thanks for your comment! Your journey along the path towards the Mythicist camp sounds just like mine, and Dr. Price's books were a big push for me as well.

It looks like more historians are starting to call more and more of those previously accepted assumptions into question, thanks to scholars like Price and Doherty. Rick Carrier is coming out soon with a book on the historicity issue that will be sure to make an impact when it comes out. In teh meantime, if you haven't picked up a copy of The Christian Delusion (edited by John Loftus) do yourself a favor and grab it - it's beautiful!All the best,-Dave Fitzgerald

I haven't read your book, but if you think that 1 Cor 1.22-23 is evidence that Paul's Jesus did no miracles, is this not also evidence that Paul's Jesus did no preaching? Paul's Jesus had no wisdom to offer the Greeks but this is in direct contrast with Mark 6.3 and other "wisdom" that Jesus preaches in the gospels.

I guess, also, this would make sense of when Gnosticism emerged. If the gospels (written in the late 1st century) are the first time Christians were presented with a preaching Jesus who taught things in secret, then this would make sense of Gnosticism's focus on secret teachings and secret wisdom immediately following in the early 2nd century.

@J. Quinton:J., Great observation re: 1 Cor.1:22-23; it hadn't occurred to me to make the connection with Jesus' wisdom, but yes, I think you're absolutely right.

The second point is trickier. I would be cautious about connecting the secret teacher motif in Mark with the secrecy in Gnostic teachings, mainly because that focus on secrecy and mystical, allegorical sacred teachings is also a major component of the Mystery Faiths that had been in place long before Christianity or Gnosticism. It seems to me the secrecy we see in both is a natural continuation of what we see in ancient religions in general.

Yes, I think that over time more history professionals with take up the topic. RE Carrier's book... I heard an interview with him where he talked about two books, related. One will be a methodology book about using Baynsian theory in the history and religion industry. And then a 2nd book where he will actually apply that idea to the idea of the theory of the historicity of Jesus. Looking forward to both actually.

No, I have not read the Loftus edited Christian delusion. I think Bob Price may have a chapter in it. Will look out for it.

I have been trying to come up more and more with a way to find and gather this kind of nonsense for free. And not just free but via the internet. I am a retired computer geek, and recently I have been spending my time in addition to study patristics, in trying to use all the new tools, and coordindate them into some kind of way for big boyz like use to collect files like we used to collect baseball cards. And then mechanism that will allow people to find each other and share their files.

I have been thinking for a while that the naturalistic historians should get together and start a wiki that would be editable by naturalistic historians. This would not just facilite getting the public info that is not tainted by Church dogma, but could also be the backbone of a loose association of naturalistic historicans that would be the beginnings of a SBL type rival group that focused exclusively on non-supernaturalistic history of Christianity.

In any event... feel free to pop by RichGriese.NET and use the CHAT feature some time. We talk in general and scope out each others interests much more quickly than comment threads, we can exchange email's if you are up for that, and can just talk Christian history in general.

Thanks for the note. You can also contact me via my blog if you want to email. But, yes, I have enjoy Dr. Price's books, and I happen to know him personally from when he lived near me years ago. I studied Christian origins for many years, and still keep up with the topic, and talk with many people regularly about it, mostly via email, and/or subscribing to their blogs via RSS.

very few friends share my interest in this subject. They are not believers and just don't care. I wonder if while religion begins to die off whether interest in this subject will become replaced with why humans believe in nonsense. I was on a small Caribbean island recently and passed a jammed Mormon church. I was speechless. A brand new American religion that preached until very recently that blacks are not fully human, its hard to understand how anyone believes in the planet Kolob much less Harvard grads or poor Caribbean people. Makes perfect sense that there may never have been a Jesus Christ.

You have heavily misunderstood LDS teachings. LDS teachings have never taught "that blacks are not fully human" at any point in its history and your thoughts on what Kolob really is heavily off and shows your lack of research on the subject. The "Christ Myth" theory has been long debunked by Christian and non-Christian scholars and only proposed by atheists with an agenda.

Religion is here to stay, and we will continue to preach the word as Jesus directs.